Great Lives
Genre | discussion |
---|---|
Running time | 28 mins |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language(s) | English |
Home station | BBC Radio 4 |
Host(s) |
Joan Bakewell Humphrey Carpenter Francine Stock Matthew Parris |
Producer(s) | Chris Ledgard |
Air dates | since 24 August 2001 |
No. of series | 31 |
No. of episodes | 282 |
Website | Website |
Podcast | Podcast RSS feed |
Great Lives is a BBC Radio 4 biography series, produced in Bristol. It has been presented by Joan Bakewell, Humphrey Carpenter, Francine Stock and currently (since April 2006) Matthew Parris. A distinguished guest is asked to nominate the person they feel is truly deserving of the title "Great Life". The presenter and a recognised expert (a biographer, family member or fellow practitioner) are on hand to discuss the life. The programmes are 28 minutes long, originally broadcast on Fridays at 23:00, more recently at 16:30 on Tuesday with a repeat at 23:00 on Friday.
Table of nominators and subjects
Series 0, August – November 2001
(presenter: Joan Bakewell)
- Tim Waterstone, bookshop owner, nominated Clement Attlee, Labour politician
- Rosie Boycott, journalist, nominated Sir Ernest Shackleton, polar explorer
- Terence Conran, food and design entrepreneur, nominated the Michelin brothers (André and Édouard), inventors of the detachable pneumatic tyre and the travel guide
- Ralph Steadman, cartoonist and caricaturist, nominated Friedrich Nietzsche, philosopher
- Barbara Castle, Labour politician, nominated Sylvia Pankhurst, suffragette
- Frank Delaney, writer and broadcaster, nominated Henri Matisse, artist
- Jonathan Miller, theatre and opera director, nominated Marshall McLuhan, communication theorist and philosopher
- Fay Weldon, writer, nominated H. G. Wells, visionary author
- Rabbi Lionel Blue, journalist and broadcaster, nominated Swami Vivekananda, 19th-century Hindu missionary
- Jackie Stewart, racing driver, nominated King Hussein of Jordan
- Joan Littlewood, theatre director, nominated Brendan Behan, Irish writer
- Lord Tebbit, Conservative politician, nominated King Alfred the Great, 9th-century king of Wessex
Series 1, May – August 2002
(presenter: Humphrey Carpenter)
- Ned Sherrin, broadcaster, author and stage director, nominated Sir Donald Wolfit, actor-manager
- Elizabeth Filkin, former Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards, nominated George Eliot, novelist
- Steven Isserlis, cellist, nominated Franz Schubert, composer
- Lord Carrington, conservative politician, nominated Field Marshal Viscount Slim, military leader
- Frederic Raphael, author and screenwriter, nominated Alexander the Great
- Janet Street-Porter, journalist and media executive, nominated the Marquis de Sade, philosopher, revolutionary politician and libertine
- Chris Barber, jazz trombonist and bandleader, nominated Louis Armstrong, jazz trumpeter and singer
- Sue Limb, writer and broadcaster, nominated Lord Byron, poet
- Frank Keating, sports writer, nominated Tom Spring, 19th-century bare-knuckle boxer
- Kirsty Young, broadcaster, nominated Katharine Graham, newspaper publisher
Series 2, October – December 2002
(presenter: Humphrey Carpenter)
- Bernard Manning, comedian, nominated Mother Teresa of Calcutta, Roman Catholic nun
- Sir Paul Nurse, geneticist and cell biologist, nominated Erasmus Darwin, 18th century physician
- Darcus Howe, writer and broadcaster, nominated C. L. R. James, sportsman and revolutionary
- Bea Campbell, journalist and author, nominated Rachel Carson, marine biologist and conservationist
- Muriel Gray, journalist and broadcaster, nominated M. R. James, writer of ghost stories
- Ahdaf Soueif, novelist and cultural commentator, nominated Umm Kulthum, Egyptian singer, songwriter and actress
- Professor Sir Harry Kroto, chemist, nominated Spinoza, philosopher
- Steve Bell, political cartoonist, nominated James Gillray, 18th-century caricaturist
- Tam Dalyell, Labour politician, nominated Richard Crossman, Labour politician
- Greg Dyke, media executive, nominated Captain James Cook, explorer
Series 3, April – June 2003
(presenter: Humphrey Carpenter)
- Beryl Bainbridge, novelist, nominated Robert Falcon Scott, polar explorer
- Leonard Slatkin, conductor and composer, nominated Sergei Rachmaninoff, composer
- John Sergeant, journalist and broadcaster, nominated Arthur Ransome, author and journalist
- Benjamin Zephaniah, writer and poet, nominated Bob Marley, reggae musician
- Steve Jones, geneticist, nominated James Hogg, poet and novelist
- Richard Ingrams, journalist and satirist, nominated G. K. Chesterton, writer
- Stacey Kent, jazz singer, nominated Powell and Pressburger, film-makers
- Richard Holmes, military historian, nominated the Man in the Iron Mask, mysterious prisoner in the Bastille
- Tanni Grey-Thompson, Welsh athlete and broadcaster, nominated David Lloyd George, Welsh politician
- Esther Rantzen, journalist and broadcaster, nominated Queen Elizabeth I, Queen of England and Ireland
Series 4, October – December 2003
(presenter: Humphrey Carpenter)
- Peter Bazalgette, television executive, nominated Noël Coward, playwright, composer, director, actor and singer
- Kit Wright, writer, nominated Samuel Johnson, author and lexicographer
- Kate Adie, war reporter, nominated Flora Sandes, pioneer female soldier
- Jenny Eclair, comedian, nominated Sarah Bernhardt, actress
- Brian Keenan, writer, nominated Bernardo O'Higgins, Chilean independence leader
- Brenda Dean, trade unionist and politician, nominated Octavia Hill, co-founder of the National Trust
- Clement Freud, broadcaster, writer, politician and chef, nominated Tommy Cooper, comedian and magician
- Armando Iannucci, comedian and writer, nominated Charles Dickens, novelist
- Linda Smith, comedian, nominated Ian Dury, singer
- Ann Leslie, journalist, nominated Mary Kingsley, writer and explorer
Series 5, April – June 2004
(presenter: Humphrey Carpenter)
- Lord Alistair McAlpine, Conservative politician, nominated Machiavelli
- Denis Healey, Labour politician, nominated Ernest Bevin, Labour politician
- Ruth Lea, economist, nominated Tchaikovsky, composer
- George Monbiot, environmental activist and writer, nominated Tom Paine, author and revolutionary
- Benedict Allen, explorer, nominated Horatio Nelson, naval hero
- Charles Wheeler, journalist and broadcaster, nominated Lyndon B. Johnson, 36th President of the United States
- Kimberley Fortier nominated Edith Wharton, writer
- Richard Eyre, theatre director, nominated Anton Chekhov, dramatist
- Kenneth Clarke, Conservative politician, nominated Benjamin Disraeli, 19th century Conservative politician
- Lord May, scientist, nominated Joseph Banks, naturalist and botanist
Series 6, October – December 2004
(presenter: Humphrey Carpenter)
- Dillie Keane, actress, singer and comedienne, nominated Gilbert and Sullivan, librettist and composer of comic operettas
- The programme originally scheduled (David Puttnam, film-maker, nominated Michael Collins, Irish nationalist leader) was withdrawn due to "production quality".[1]
- Baroness Jay, former Leader of the House of Lords, nominated Vice-Admiral Robert FitzRoy RN, captain of HMS Beagle
- Christina Gorna, barrister, nominated Vivien Leigh, actress
- Jilly Goolden, wine expert, nominated Leonard Woolf, writer and political thinker
- Gerry Anderson, broadcaster, nominated Burt Lancaster, actor
- Tim Marlow, art historian and broadcaster, nominated Marvin Gaye, soul singer
- Shami Chakrabarti, civil-rights campaigner, nominated George Orwell, author and journalist
- Marjorie Wallace, writer and charity worker, nominated Sir Edward Elgar, composer
- David Puttnam, film-maker, nominated Michael Collins, Irish nationalist leader (repeat of Programme 1?)
- Lucinda Lambton, writer and broadcaster, nominated Captain Henry Morgan, privateer
Hogmanay Special, 31 December 2004
(presenter: Humphrey Carpenter)
- Eddi Reader, Scottish singer-songwriter, nominated Robert Burns, Scottish poet
Humphrey Carpenter died on 4 January 2005, aged 58.
Series 7, April – June 2005
(presenter: Francine Stock)
- Joe Queenan, humorist, critic and author, nominated Genghis Khan, founder of the Mongol Empire
- Mary Kenny, author, nominated George Sand, writer
- Valerie Grove, journalist, nominated Charles M. Schulz, the Peanuts cartoonist
- Douglas Dunn, poet, nominated Robert Louis Stevenson, writer
- Michael Morpurgo, Children's Laureate, nominated Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, composer
- Martin Smith, Chairman of English National Opera, nominated John D. Rockefeller, industrialist, investor and philanthropist
- Yvonne Brown, lawyer, nominated Marcus Garvey, pan-African Nationalist leader
- Amanda Vickery, historian, nominated Elizabeth Gaskell, novelist
- Lord Powell nominates Ronald Reagan, former actor and 40th President of the United States
- Frederick Forsyth, novelist, nominated the 1st Duke of Wellington, soldier and statesman
Series 8, October 2005 – February 2006
(presenter: Francine Stock)
- Kathy Lette, writer, nominated Mae West, Hollywood actress
- Carole Stone, author and broadcaster,nominated R. D. Laing, psychiatrist
- Howard Goodall, composer, nominated Samuel Coleridge-Taylor, composer
- Antony Beevor, historian, and Gillian Slovo, novelist, nominated Vasily Grossman, Soviet writer
- Robert Thomson, journalist, nominated Zhao Ziyang, reforming Chinese premier
- Derek Wilson, historian and author, nominated Thomas Cromwell, 16th century politician
- Fiona Reynolds, Director-General of the National Trust, nominated Beatrix Potter, writer
- Annie Nightingale, radio broadcaster, nominated Marty Feldman, comedian and actor
- Adam Hart-Davis, historian and broadcaster, nominated Nevil Shute, novelist and aeronautical engineer
- Helen Lederer, writer and actress, nominated Dorothy Parker, writer and poet
Series 9, April – June 2006
(presenter: Matthew Parris)
- Penelope Keith, actress, nominated Morecambe and Wise, comedy double act
- Jeff Randall, journalist, nominated Andrew Carnegie, industrialist and philanthropist
- Julian Clary, comedian, nominated Noël Coward, playwright, composer, director, actor and singer; Coward was previously nominated by Peter Bazalgette in Series 4 Progamme 1
- Craig Brown, critic and satirist, nominated Sigmund Freud, neurologist and psychotherapist
- Ivan Massow, entrepreneur, nominated Ella Fitzgerald, jazz singer
- Duncan Goodhew, athlete, nominated Johnny Weissmuller, athlete-turned-actor
- Frances Cairncross, economist, journalist and academic, nominated Ignaz Semmelweis, physician and pioneer of antiseptic procedures
- Anna Raeburn, broadcaster and agony aunt, nominated Tamara Karsavina, ballerina
- Piers Morgan, journallist and broadcaster, nominated W. G. Grace, English cricketer
- Krishnan Guru-Murthy, journalist and broadcaster, nominated Robin Day, broadcaster and political interviewer
Series 10, August – September 2006
(presenter: Matthew Parris)
- Christopher Hitchens, author and journalist, nominated Leon Trotsky, Marxist revolutionary
- Garry Bushell, newspaper columnist, nominated Max Miller, comedian
- Helena Kennedy, civil liberties lawyer, nominated Eleanor Roosevelt, First Lady of the United States from 1933 to 1945
- Jeremy Vine, journalist and broadcaster, nominated W. H. Auden, poet
- Elaine Showalter, feminist literary critic, nominated Julia Ward Howe, 19th-century American abolitionist, social activist and poet
- Lord John Biffen, Conservative politician, nominated Stanley Baldwin, Conservative Prime Minister
- Joanna MacGregor, pianist, nominated Nina Simone, singer and civil rights activist
- Adair Turner, businessman and academic, nominated Charles Darwin, naturallist
Series 11, December 2006 – January 2007
(presenter: Matthew Parris)
- Joe Boyd, record producer, nominated John H. Hammond, record producer
- Lesley Abdela, feminist campaigner, nominated Millicent Garrett Fawcett, suffragette
- Kathy Sykes, scientist and broadcaster, nominated Albert Einstein, physicist
- Victor Spinetti, actor, nominated Joan Littlewood, theatre director
- Alan Davies, actor and comedian, nominated Richard Beckinsale, actor
- Camilla Wright, journalist, nominated Martha Gellhorn, war reporter
- Anne Fine, author, nominated William Beveridge, economist and social reformer
- Ann Widdecombe, former Conservative MP, nominated Pope John Paul II
Series 12, April – May 2007
(presenter: Matthew Parris)
- Phill Jupitus, comedian, nominated Joe Strummer, frontman of The Clash
- Nick Danziger, photographer, nominated Tintin, fictional Belgian reporter
- William Boyd, author, nominated Anton Chekhov, playwright
- Pallab Ghosh, BBC science correspondent, nominated Marie Curie, chemist & physicist
- Pauline Black, singer & actor, nominated Billie Holiday, jazz singer
- Fiona Bruce, television presenter & newsreader, nominated Mata Hari, accused spy
- Yvonne Brewster, theatre director, actress and writer, nominated Claude McKay, poet
- Barry Cunliffe, archaeologist, nominated Julius Caesar, Roman leader
- Phil Hammond, comedian & broadcaster, nominated George Bernard Shaw, writer & activist
Series 13, August – October 2007
(presenter: Matthew Parris)
- Jude Kelly, theatre director and producer, nominated Lilian Baylis, theatrical producer and manager
- David Trimble, politician, nominated Elvis Presley, singer
- Maggi Hambling, painter and sculptor, nominated Rembrandt, artist
- The Earl of Snowdon, photographer, and Alex Moulton, engineer, nominated Alec Issigonis, car designer
- Michael Craig-Martin, conceptual artist, nominated John Cage, avant-garde composer
- David Rowntree, drummer with Blur and political activist, nominated Lord Denning, judge
- John Motson, football commentator, nominated Brian Clough, football manager
- Prue Leith, restaurateur, nominated Elizabeth David, food writer
- General Sir Michael Rose, British Army officer, nominated George Washington, first President of the United States
Series 14, December 2007 – January 2008
(presenter: Matthew Parris)
- Jan Ravens, impressionist, nominated Thora Hird, actress
- Quentin Blake, illustrator, nominated George Cruikshank, caricaturist
- Redmond O'Hanlon, travel writer, nominated Alfred Russel Wallace, naturalist
- Sir Richard Sykes, biochemist, nominated Howard Florey, pharmacologist and pathologist
- Roger Graef, documentary maker, nominated Groucho Marx, comedian and film star
- Jacqueline Wilson, author of children's literature, nominated Katherine Mansfield, writer
- Joe Simpson, mountaineer, nominated Hermann Buhl, mountaineer
Series 15, April – May 2008
(presenter: Matthew Parris)
- Mark Gatiss, actor and writer, nominated Peter Cushing, actor
- Rhona Cameron, comedian, nominated Charles Bukowski, novelist and poet
- Steve Cram, former athlete, nominated "The Flying Finn" Paavo Nurmi, runner
- Stirling Moss, racing car driver, nominated Juan Manuel Fangio, racing car driver
- Anna Ford, TV newsreader, nominated Paul Robeson, black singer, actor and civil rights activist
- Simon Armitage, poet, nominated Ian Curtis, lead singer with Joy Division
- Nicholas Parsons, actor and radio & TV presenter, nominated Edward Lear, painter and poet
- Arabella Weir, comedian, actress and writer, nominated Joyce Grenfell, actress, comedian and singer-songwriter
- Colin Dexter, crime writer, nominated A. E. Housman, scholar and poet
Series 16, August – September 2008
(presenter: Matthew Parris)
- Jon Snow, journalist and broadcaster, nominated Lord Longford, politician and social reformer
- David Lammy, politician, nominated Richard Pryor, comedian
- David Attenborough, naturalist and broadcaster, nominated Robert Hooke, 17th century scientist
- Bob Harris, radio presenter, nominated Alan Freed, disc jockey
- George Osborne, then shadow chancellor, nominated Henry VII, king
- Lesley Riddoch, broadcaster, nominated David Ervine, Northern Ireland politician
- Mike Jackson, army general, nominated Bill Slim, second world war Field Marshal
- Deborah Meaden, businesswoman, nominated Lady Hester Stanhope, traveller, diplomat and spy
- Ian Hislop, editor of Private Eye, nominated William Hogarth, painter and satirist
Series 17, December 2008 – February 2009
(presenter: Matthew Parris)
- Harvey Goldsmith, performing arts promoter, nominated Luciano Pavarotti, Italian operatic tenor
- Michael Grade, broadcasting executive, nominated Billy Marsh, theatrical agent
- Raymond Briggs, illustrator and writer, nominated Beachcomber, columnist
- David Soul, actor, nominated Dietrich Bonhoeffer, German theologian and Resistance figure
- Tracy-Ann Oberman, actress, nominated Bette Davis, American film actress
- Pam Ayres, poet, nominated Tony Hancock, comedian and actor
- Redmond O'Hanlon, travel writer, nominated Alfred Russel Wallace, naturalist (The usual Tuesday slot was pre-empted by coverage of the inauguration of President Obama, and this programme, originally broadcast as Series 14 Programme 3, was repeated in the Friday slot.)
- Rachel De Thame, horticulturalist, nominated Margot Fonteyn, ballerina
- Ken Livingstone, former Mayor of London, nominated Robert Kennedy, American politician
Series 18, April – May 2009
(presenter: Matthew Parris)
- Stuart Hall, broadcaster, nominated Napoleon Bonaparte, French historical figure
- Polly Toynbee, journalist, nominated Roy Jenkins, politician
- David Mellor, politician, nominated Thomas Beecham, conductor
- Ruby Wax, American comedian, nominated Carl Jung, Swiss founder of analytical psychology
- Colin Murray, broadcaster, nominated Frank Sinatra, American singer
- Andy Sheppard, saxophonist, nominated John Coltrane, saxophonist
- Michael O'Donnell, doctor and broadcaster, nominated Fred Astaire, dancer and actor
- Misha Glenny, journalist, nominated Giovanni Falcone, Italian magistrate and anti-Mafia campaigner
Series 19, August – September 2009
(presenter: Matthew Parris)
- Andrew Motion, Poet Laureate, nominated Alfred, Lord Tennyson, Poet Laureate
- David Miliband, Member of Parliament and Minister, nominated Joe Slovo, South African ANC leader
- George Galloway, Member of Parliament, nominated John Cornford, poet and activist
- Dervla Murphy, travel writer, nominated Freya Stark, travel writer
- Rolf Harris, Australian musician and artist, nominated Kyffin Williams, Welsh artist
- Boris Johnson, the Mayor of London, nominated Samuel Johnson, writer of the great dictionary
- Kate Humble, TV presenter, nominated Miriam Makeba, South African singer and anti-apartheid activist
- Paul Daniels, magician, nominated Harry Houdini, escapologist
- John Major, former British Prime Minister, nominated Rudyard Kipling, author and poet
Series 20, December 2009 – February 2010
(presenter: Matthew Parris)
- Sir Ranulph Fiennes, explorer, nominated Henry V, king of England
- Rich Hall, stand-up comedian, nominated Tennessee Williams, playwright
- Neil Innes, musician and performer, nominated Vivian Stanshall, musician and comic writer
- Munira Mirza, London Mayoral advisor on arts and culture, nominated Hannah Arendt, political philosopher
- Christopher Biggins, actor, nominated Nero, Roman emperor
- Jenny Agutter, actress, nominated Lise Meitner, Austrian physicist
- David Bailey, photographer, nominated Pablo Picasso, artist
- John Williams, composer, nominated Agustin Barrios Mangore, Paraguayan guitarist
- Richard Dawkins, ethologist and evolutionary biologist, nominated Bill Hamilton, evolutionary theorist
Series 21, April – May 2010
(presenter: Matthew Parris)
- John Godber, playwright, nominated Bertolt Brecht, writer and theatre director
- Clive Stafford Smith, human rights lawyer, nominated Robin Hood, folklore hero
- Peter White, broadcaster, nominated Douglas Jardine, England cricket captain
- John Lloyd, comedy writer and television producer, nominated Richard Buckminster Fuller, architect and futurist
- Stuart Rose, chairman of Marks and Spencer, nominated Matthew Flinders, cartographer
- Baroness Sarah Hogg, economist and journalist, nominated Charlotte Guest, polymath and businesswoman
- Brian Cox, physicist, nominated Carl Sagan, astronomer and astrophysicist
- Viv Anderson, England footballer, nominated Arthur Wharton, athlete and football player
Series 22, August – September 2010
(presenter: Matthew Parris)
- John Harris, journalist and author, nominated John Lennon, musician
- Bettany Hughes, historian, nominated Sappho, poet
- Dominic Sandbrook, historian, nominated Richard Nixon, American president
- Camila Batmanghelidjh, founder of Kids Company, nominated Mary Carpenter, educational and social reformer
- Eleanor Bron, actress, nominated Simone Weil, French philosopher and mystic
- Edwina Currie, former MP, nominated Golda Meir, former Prime Minister of Israel
- Digby Jones, former director of the CBI, nominated Winston Churchill, former Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
Series 23, November 2010 – January 2011
(presenter: Matthew Parris)
- Mark Borkowski, PR man, nominated Malcolm McLaren, the rock & roll swindler
- John Hegley, poet, nominated DH Lawrence, writer
- Gerry Robinson, business guru, nominated Samuel Beckett, Irish playwright
- Lionel Blair, dancer & TV celebrity, nominated Sammy Davis Jr, dancer, singer & entertainer
- Neil Kinnock, former MP, nominated Aneurin Bevan, founder of the NHS
- Barry Cryer, comedian, nominated J. B. Priestley, novelist & playwright
- Jim Al-Khalili, Iraqi-born physicist, nominated Gertrude Bell, writer, traveller, politician & administrator
- Katherine Whitehorn, journalist, nominated Mary Stott, campaigning journalist
- Kwame Kwei-Armah, playwright & actor, nominated Marcus Garvey, inspirational black leader; Garvey was previously nominated by Yvonne Brown in Series 7 Programme 7
Series 24, April – May 2011
(presenter: Matthew Parris)
- Clive Sinclair, British inventor, nominated Thomas Edison, American inventor
- Charles Hazlewood, conductor, nominated Leonard Bernstein, conductor and composer
- Diana Quick, actress, nominated Simone de Beauvoir, philosopher
- Sue MacGregor, broadcaster, nominated Kathleen Ferrier, contralto singer
- Lynne Truss, writer and journalist, nominated Lewis Carroll, mathematician and author of Alice in Wonderland
- Caroline Lucas, British Green MP, nominated Petra Kelly, German Green politician
- Matthew Syed, sports journalist, nominated Jack Johnson, "the Galveston Giant", boxer
- Diane Abbott, Member of Parliament, nominated Harold Pinter, playwright
Series 25, August – September 2011
(presenter: Matthew Parris)
- Tim Butcher, journalist, nominated Graham Greene, author, playwright and critic
- Janice Long, broadcaster, nominated Kirsty MacColl, singer-songwriter
- Gwyneth Lewis, poet, nominated Emily Dickinson, American poet
- Antonio Carluccio, Italian restaurateur, nominated Eduardo Paolozzi, artist
- Daisy Goodwin, broadcaster and poetry curator, nominated William Shakespeare, poet and playwright
- Simon Day, comedian, nominated Hans Fallada, German writer
- Simon Jenkins, journalist, nominated Edwin Lutyens, architect
- Cerys Matthews, musician, nominated Hildegard of Bingen, German mystic
- Graeme le Saux, former England footballer, nominated Gerald Durrell, author and conservationist
Series 26, December 2011 – January 2012
(presenter: Matthew Parris)
- Michael Sheen, actor, nominated Philip K. Dick, science fiction writer
- Raymond Tallis, philosopher, nominated Ludwig Wittgenstein, philosopher
- Steven Pinker, psychologist and cognitive scientist, nominated Thomas Hobbes, philosopher
- Brian Sewell, art critic, nominated Ludwig II of Bavaria
- Jim Carter, actor, nominated Lonnie Donegan, skiffle musician
- Martin Rees, astrophysicist, nominated Joseph Rotblat, physicist and campaigner against nuclear weapons
- Emma Kennedy, actress, nominated Gracie Allen, comedienne
- Clare Gerada, doctors' leader, nominated Vera Brittain, writer, feminist and pacifist (with expert Shirley Williams, politician, and daughter of Vera Brittain).
- Baroness Warsi, Conservative politician, nominated Razia Sultana, 13th-century Indian princess
Series 27, April – May 2012
(presenter: Matthew Parris)
- Owen Sheers, Welsh poet, nominated Dylan Thomas, Welsh poet
- Will Self, journalist and novelist, nominated Oscar Wilde, writer and poet
- Erin Pizzey, writer and campaigner, nominated Gertrude Stein, writer and art collector
- Tom Robinson, singer and leader of the Tom Robinson Band, nominated George Lyward, educationalist, teacher and psychotherapist who worked at Finchden Manor
- Alexei Sayle, comedian, nominated Edward Said, Palestinian-American literary theorist and campaigner for Palestinian rights
- Eric Pickles, politician, nominated John Ford, American film director
- Diana Athill, British novelist, memoirist and diarist, nominated Francisco Goya, Spanish painter
- Lynn Barber, British journalist, nominated Sebastian Walker, founder of Walker Books, a publishing house for children
Series 28, July – September 2012
(presenter: Matthew Parris)
- Des Lynam, sports commentator, nominated Henry Cooper, English heavyweight boxer
- Janine di Giovanni, author and foreign correspondent, nominated Josephine Bonaparte, wife of Napoleon Bonaparte
- Rory Stewart, Tory Member of Parliament, author and adventurer, nominated Sir Walter Scott, distinguished author
- Bill Paterson, actor, nominated Leonard Maguire, Scottish actor
- Natalie Haynes, comedian, nominated Juvenal, Roman poet
- Ken Dodd, comedian, nominated Stan Laurel, film actor and one half of the duo Laurel and Hardy
- Stephen Frears, film director, nominated Karel Reisz, film director
- Alan Johnson, politician and former home secretary, nominated George Orwell, writer
- Naomi Wolf, commentator and author of The Beauty Myth, nominated Edith Wharton, novelist, wit and feminist
Series 29, December 2012 – January 2013
(presenter: Matthew Parris)
- Martin Broughton, chairman of British Airways and the British Horse Racing Board, nominated Dick Francis, crime novelist and former jockey
- Francesca Simon, children's writer and author of the Horrid Henry books, nominated Jean Cocteau, French writer and film director
- Lemn Sissay, author and broadcaster, nominated Prince Alemayehu, favourite prince of Queen Victoria
- Stuart Maconie, radio presenter and music critic, nominated Ralph Vaughan Williams, composer and folk music collector
- Richard Herring, comedian, nominated Rasputin, Russian Orthodox mystic
- Max Mosley, former president of the Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA), nominated John Stuart Mill, philosopher
- Laurence Llewelyn-Bowen, interior designer, nominated Aubrey Beardsley, artist of the Aesthetic movement
- Grace Dent, journalist, nominated Nancy Mitford, novelist and biographer
- Carol Klein, gardening expert, nominated William Robinson, Irish-born journalist and gardener
Series 30, April – May 2013
(presenter: Matthew Parris)
- Peter Hitchens, author and columnist, nominated George Bell, Anglican theologian
- Bobby Friction, DJ and presenter, nominated Galileo, pioneer astronomer
- Chris Tarrant, DJ and former television presenter, nominated Kenny Everett, comedian and former disc jockey
- John Blashford-Snell, explorer, nominated David Livingstone, explorer
- Gyles Brandreth, writer and broadcaster, nominated Arthur Conan Doyle, author
- Justine Roberts, founder of Mumsnet, a website for parents, nominated Bill Shankly, football manager
- John Cooper Clarke, poet, nominated Salvador Dalí, surrealist painter
- Edmund de Waal, ceramicist and writer, nominated Primo Levi, chemist and Holocaust writer
- Dr Lucy Worsley, Chief Curator at Historic Royal Palaces, nominated Florence Nightingale, nurse, health administrator and statistician
Series 31, August - October 2013
(presenter: Matthew Parris)
- Russell Grant, astrologer and broadcaster, nominated Ivor Novello, composer and actor
- Gabriel Gbadamosi, playwright, nominated Fela Kuti, Nigerian musician
- Tanika Gupta, nominated Rabindranath Tagore, Bengali polymath
- Julie Burchill, writer, nominated Ava Gardner, film star
- Paul Mason, journalist and broadcaster, nominated Louise Michel, 19th century French anarchist
- Peter Bowles, actor, nominated George Devine, theatre director
- Konnie Huq, television presenter and writer, nominated Ada Lovelace, computing pioneer
- Brendan Barber, trade unionist, nominated John Steinbeck, novelist
- Al Murray, comedian, nominated Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery, 1st Viscount Montgomery of Alamein, "Monty"
Series 32, December 2013 - January 2014
(presenter: Matthew Parris)
- Ricky Ross, singer with Deacon Blue, nominated Hank Williams, singer-songwriter
- Michael Horovitz, poet, nominated Allen Ginsberg, Beat poet
- Meg Rosoff, novelist, nominated Isabella Bird, Victorian traveller
- David Chipperfield, architect, nominated Le Corbusier, architect
- David Baddiel, comedian, nominated John Updike, novelist
- Adil Ray, actor and TV personality, nominated Dave Allen, comedian
- Mark Constantine, businessman and founder of Lush cosmetics, nominated Kahlil Gibran, poet
- Sara Cox, radio presenter, nominated Lisa 'Left Eye' Lopes, hip-hop artist
Series 33, April - May 2014
(presenter: Matthew Parris)
- Evelyn Glennie, percussionist, nominated Jacqueline du Pré, cellist
- Sarah Vine, newspaper columnist, nominated Dante Alighieri, 12th-13th century Italian poet
- Mark Walport, Chief Scientific Adviser, nominated Hans Sloane, art collector and benefactor of the British Museum
- Marcus du Sautoy, mathematician, nominated Jorge Luis Borges, Argentinian writer
- Deborah Moggach, novelist, nominated Arnold Bennett, 19th-century novelist
- Isy Suttie, comedian, musician and actor, nominated Jake Thackray, singer-songwriter
- John Craven, journalist and TV presenter, nominated Isambard Kingdom Brunel, 19th-century engineer
- Emma Kirkby, soprano singer, nominated Henry Purcell, 17th-century composer
- Michael Palin, Python, writer and broadcaster, nominated Ernest Hemingway, American writer
Series 34, August - October 2014
(presenter: Matthew Parris)
- Jonathan Meades, writer and broadcaster, nominated Edward Burra, artist
- Jazzie B, DJ and music entrepreneur, nominated James Brown, American singer
- Oona King, politician, nominated Ida B. Wells, American journalist and civil rights leader
- Ray Mears, woodsman and TV presenter, nominated Rommel, German field marshal of World War II
- Tom Shakespeare, sociologist, nominated Gramsci, Italian Marxist politician
- Labi Siffre, poet and singer-songwriter, nominated Arthur Ransome, author and journalist
- Stella Rimington, writer and former Director General of MI5, nominated Dorothy L. Sayers, crime writer
- Andrew Adonis, politician and academic, nominated Joseph Bazalgette, Victorian engineer responsible for London's main sewers
- Edith Hall, classicist, nominated Lucille Ball, American actress and comedian
Series 35, December 2014 - January 2015
(presenter: Matthew Parris)
- Arthur Smith, comedian, nominated Emil Zátopek, Czechoslovak distance runner
- Laura Bates, feminist writer, nominated Louisa May Alcott, 19th century American author of Little Women
- Brian Eno, musician, nominated Michael Young, sociologist and politician
- Philippa Langley, historian, nominated Richard III, 15th -century King of England
- Tom Solomon, neurologist, nominated Roald Dahl, children's writer
- Michael Dobbs, politician and novelist, nominated Guy Burgess, spy
- Eve Pollard, journalist and editor, nominated Nora Ephron, American screenwriter
- Mervyn King, former Governor of the Bank of England, nominated Risto Ryti, President of Finland during World War II
Series 36, April 2015 -
(presenter: Matthew Parris)
- Trevor McDonald, news presenter, nominated Learie Constantine, Trinidadian cricketer and politician
- Rachel Johnson, author and journalist, nominated Lady Ottoline Morrell, literary hostess and associate of the Bloomsbury Group
- Kulvinder Ghir, comedian and actor, nominated Zoran Mušič, Slovene artist and survivor of Dachau
- Helen Ghosh, Director General of the National Trust, nominated James Lees-Milne, writer and expert on country houses
References
- ↑ Great Lives at radiolistings.co.uk
External links
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